BOOK III
ON FORMS OF WATER
PREFACE
Having begun a mighty task in my old age I must make up for lost time by hurrying on. The magnitude of it is actually an incentive to effort. Such studies are far superior to the historian’s task of recording the deeds of the robbers and butchers of mankind. The former raise us above the vicissitudes of fortune. “The principal thing” is to have a pure heart and clean hands, to escape slavery to self. The study of the universe exalts us to this 109
I. The cause of rivers and their varieties. Waters vary in amount at different seasons, in temperature, in medicinal qualities 114
II. Varieties of taste, weight, colour, utility to health, consistency 115
III. Gravitation or the force of air determines the flow of water. Surface and spring water: they may be combined as in Lake Fucinus 115
IV. Why is the sea not filled nor the earth drained dry by rivers? 116
V. Some hold that what flows into the sea returns by secret passages cleansed of its salinity 116
VI. Some think rain supplies the rivers, and in proof cite the interior of Africa as contrasted with Gaul and Germany 117
VII. Objections to this argument. Rain does not penetrate more than 10 feet. If the earth is dry, it absorbs the rain; if it is saturated, the rain runs off. Again, rivers rise in rocks and mountains, where what rain ever fell must have run off. Rich wells of “living” water are found in the driest ground at depth. Fountains well out at mountain tops 117
VIII. The interior of the earth is, according to some, a huge receptacle of fresh water 118
IX. Others think the air which is contained within the earth being prevented from circulating turns into water 119
X. But indeed the four elements are all interchangeable 120
XI. Though the supply of water is perennial, rivers and springs are intermittent 121
XII. The abundance of water is no difficulty, since it is a fourth part of the universe 123
XIII. The relation of water to the other elements. Thales’ silly notion that the earth sails in water like a ship at sea 124
XIV. The Egyptians divide each of the elements into male and female 125
XV. The veins of the earth resemble those of the human body. There are likewise the analogies of marrow, mucus, etc., of injuries and of bleeding, of parturition, perspiration, etc. 125
XVI. Intermittent fountains are an illustration of seasonal activity. The great vacant spaces of the earth and their tenants. Underground fish 128
XVII. The incredible wonders of nature are paralleled and even outdone by the excesses of luxury 129
XVIII. The extravagances of luxury, which make a wise man mad 130
XIX. To return--a sudden eruption of water casts up fish, generally poisonous. This points to the unfailing supply of subterranean water 132
XX. Various tastes of water due to four causes; qualities of water--petrifying, soporific, intoxicating, fatal 133
XXI. The same pestilential influence as taints rivers is perceived in caves: the noxious rivers flow from or through them 134
XXII. The Ocean and seas are coeval with the universe. So probably are abnormal rivers like the Danube and the Nile 135
XXIII. Rain and surface water must be added to subterranean 135
XXIV. The causes of hot springs 136
XXV. Poisonous rivers. Colouring power of others. Great specific gravity of certain waters, its effects and cause 137
XXVI. Intermittent rivers and springs. Means possessed by river, fount, and sea of purifying themselves 141
XXVII. Digression on the universal deluge which will destroy the world. Nature is niggardly in creation, lavish in destruction. Ovid is unequal in his treatment of this catastrophe 143
XXVIII. Further imaginative pictures of what water can do by way of destruction. Alternative methods of destroying the earth--water and fire 148
XXIX. Further possibilities of the same character. Distinctions of seas, gulfs, etc., will all be obliterated; nature and the works of man will alike be overthrown 150
XXX. Nature shows by the chafing of the sea that she designs to inundate the world. A deluge is part of the fore-ordained plan. But there will be a new earth and a new race of men who will not sin--for a time 154